Planners yesterday unveiled a revised scheme for a development at the Brooklyn Bridge, rearranging the size of its condo towers and adding an outdoor skating rink to a park.

The plan makes the 1.3-mile water’s-edge development on the Brooklyn side of the span more accessible, and rearranges the height and bulk of controversial towers to be built at either end.

The 30-story condo tower at the park’s Atlantic Avenue end would be cut 10 stories and the height of an adjacent building would go from eight stories to 14. This would create a larger, greener southern entrance to the park. The new housing would be next to an existing building on Furman Street that owner and politically connected developer Robert Levine plans to convert into 500 condo apartments. Another proposal is to build two 20-story condos and then add housing to another Furman Street building next to Levine’s

About 10 civic groups want to block the park’s construction unless the 1,200 units of luxury apartments are removed.

“We want a park, we don’t want a housing development. And to spread the housing across the park takes something bad and makes its terrible,” said Judi Francis, who lives near the site and heads the groups’ nonprofit legal defense fund.